Princeton

ARTICLES ABOUT PRINCETON BY DATE - PAGE 5

SportsDirect Inc. Recap: Princeton 39, Harvard 34 Princeton 39, Harvard 34: Quinn Epperly threw a 36-yard touchdown pass to Roman Wilson with 13 seconds left as the Tigers rallied from 24 points down in the fourth quarter to stun the previously unbeaten Crimson. Princeton (4-2, 3-0 Ivy League) scored 29 points in the final 11:19 to put an end to the longest winning streak in Division I at 14 games. Connor Michelsen had three touchdown passes earlier in the fourth quarter and the Tigers also blocked a Harvard field goal attempt with less than five minutes remaining.

Alfred Zelent was giddy the night before he was to fly to Washington, D.C. After nearly seven months of waiting, the 89-year-old World War II veteran would finally take his Honor Flight, a charitable trip for veterans to visit the National World War II Memorial. "I went to bed at 8:30 in the evening, and I couldn't get to sleep," the Gurnee resident said. Zelent and more than 90 other World War II veterans from the Chicago area took the whirlwind trip Aug. 1. A survivor of a devastating Japanese attack on a U.S. ship in 1944, Zelent said the experience touched him in a way he couldn't have imagined.

NEW YORK, May 1 (Reuters) - The U.S. government sued the Princeton Review, accusing it of claiming millions of dollars in reimbursement for tutoring services it did not provide in a federally funded program for underprivileged children. The civil fraud lawsuit, filed in Manhattan federal court on Tuesday by the Manhattan U.S. Attorney, also charges a former company employee it said was involved in the fraud.

OAKLAND, California (Reuters) - A California school known as the "Princeton of Pot" has reopened after a federal raid, but with a bare-bones staff of volunteers to teach the art of cannabis cultivation, after the crackdown crimped its funding and forced it to lay off 25 paid employees. The raid earlier this month on Oaksterdam University, which offers courses on the growing and dispensing of marijuana, turned the Oakland-based school into the latest flashpoint between federal law enforcement and medical cannabis advocates in states where pot has been decriminalized for medicinal purposes.

* Oaksterdam University to reopen Wednesday * Protesters rally in front of San Francisco's City Hall By Ronnie Cohen SAN FRANCISCO, April 3 (Reuters) - Medical marijuana advocates on Tuesday vowed to reopen a San Francisco-area college devoted to cannabis cultivation and known as the "Princeton of Pot" a day after federal agents shut down the school in a raid. Hundreds of protesters rallied in front of San Francisco's City Hall, some on crutches and in wheelchairs and smoking hand-rolled joints.